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The frontooccipital interaction mechanism of high-frequency acoustoelectric signal.

Authors: Song X, Huang P, Chen X, Xu M, Ming D

Based on acoustoelectric effect, acoustoelectric brain imaging has been proposed, which is a high spatiotemporal resolution neural imaging method. At the focal spot, brain electrical activity is encoded by focused ultrasound, and corresponding high-frequency acoustoelectric signal is generated. Previous studies have revealed that acoustoelectric signal can also be detected in other non-focal brain regions. However, the processing mechanism of acoustoelectric signal between different brain regions remains sparse. Here, with acoustoelectric signal generated in the left primary visual cortex, we investigated the spatial distribution characteristics and temporal propagation characteristics of acoustoelectric signal in the transmission. We observed a strongest transmission strength within the frontal lobe, and the global temporal statistics indicated that the frontal lobe features in acoustoelectric signal transmission. Then, cross-frequency phase-amplitude coupling was used to investigate the coordinated activity in the AE signal band range between frontal and occipital lobes. The results showed that intra-structural cross-frequency coupling and cross-structural coupling co-occurred between these two lobes, and, accordingly, high-frequency brain activity in the frontal lobe was effectively coordinated by distant occipital lobe. This study revealed the frontooccipital long-range interaction mechanism of acoustoelectric signal, which is the foundation of improving the performance of acoustoelectric brain imaging.

Introduction

Purpose Other
Study Objective To investigate the mechanism of fronto-occipital interactions underlying high-frequency acoustoelectric signals.
Animal model / Human subject Rat; Wistar
Disease model Healthy
Targeted brain region(s) Primary Visual Cortex
Target coordinates AP: -5.7 mm; ML: -4 mm; vertical: -1.5 mm

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes Acoustoelectric signal propagation was primarily ipsilateral, with strongest transmission intensity within the frontal lobe. Analysis of AE- band activity supported coordinated fronto-occipital interactions mediated through parietal processing.;
Safety-related matter The provided text contains no mention of safety concerns or adverse effects.

Brain Region

Ultrasound Parameters

Ultrasound instrument Single-element focused transducer (Olympus A303S)
FUS Frequency 1 MHz
FUS Pressure 1.57 Mpa
FUS Mode pulsed
Focal Characteristics Focal depth: None; Focal length: 20 mm; Aperture size: None
Treatment frequency Single

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